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A35228 An epitome of all the lives of the kings of France from Pharamond the First, to the now most Christian King Levvis the thirteenth : with a relation of the famous battailes of the two kings of England, who were the first victorious princes that conquered France / translated out of the French coppy by R.B. Esq. R. B., 1632?-1725?; Commynes, Philippe de, ca. 1447-1511.; Brathwaite, Richard, 1588?-1673. 1639 (1639) Wing C7322A; ESTC S108602 91,960 364

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entituled themselves Dukes and Princes of the French They called Hunaud to accompt who had made himselfe a proprietary Lord of Aquitaine In the meane time Griffon fastened upon Laon claiming it as his right from whence he was fetcht out and imprisoned at Ardennes After Carboman having compelled the Almans who had revolted to his obedience An. Dom. 743 went with his brother to combate Odilon or Vtilon Duke of Bavaria who was now in Rebellion and had stolen and married their sister whom they having compelled to alter his Title of King to Duke they were contented he should peaceably enjoy their Sister as his wife At their departure out of Bavaria An. Dom. 744. they went against the Saxons whom they enforced to undergoe their accustomed yoake giving their Duke Theodoric as an Hostage who upon his owne word was sent backe but the yeare following hee was againe taken in a relapse of a new revolt against the French An. Dom. 746. Carloman became a Monke of Mount Soracte in Tuscany and afterward at Mount Cassin Whereupon Pepin reduced the whole Monarchy into his sole power Afterwards hee pursued his brother Griffon who had retired himselfe into Saxony and from thence into Bavaria from whence Pepin having fisht him hee brought him into France and gave him the Dukedome of Angely in Normandy After this Pepin affecting to joyne to himselfe both the name and the Royall Authority wrought with Pope Zachary by Bouchard Bishop of Witsbourg and by Volrude his Domesticke Chaplaine so farre that the States of France assembling at Soyssons following the declaration of Pope Zachary degraded Childeric and his wife Gisale and sent them to live a Monasticke life in the Countrey of Bavaria Anno Dom. 752. Thus was the Merovaean race deprived of its honour 293. yeares after the death of Merovaeus This King and his Queene were enforced to be religious and being depos'd were sent to a Monastery for it was a usuall custome sometime to confine the right Heire to such houses or when they would be rid of their Kings they did shave their heads and made Monks of them wherein it may bee they did their soules good but compelled Religion can never be sound Jerome living in a Wildernesse beheld Rome and a King in a Cave will thinke on a Crowne and therefore it may be said When a King weares the Fryers hood He is either very bad or good Charles Martell Duke and Prince of the French ONE Charles Martel is placed here amongst the Kings of France not because in his life time hee tooke upon him the Name and Title of a King but because indeed hee commanded all France after that hee had made an escape out of the imprisonment of Plectrude his Mother in law untill his death having made himselfe to bee created in an Assembly of three Estates of the Kingdome Prince and Duke of the Frenchmen more haughty and illustrious than that of Mayre of the Palace wherewith his Predecessours were contented and the Kings that reigned in his time had onely the bare Name and Title without any power at all as it hath beene already mentioned yea and after his decease his successors qualified him as a King as it appeares by his Tombe in the Church of Denis in France where his Statue is crowned and acoutred with Robes of Regality and is written about it in Latine words Charolus Martellus Rex And justly hee may be so styled because there was no King in his time but who he pleased Pepin Heristel was his Father Ausigise his Grandfather S. Arnulph his great Grandfather who being a Widower was made Bishop of Mets which S. Arnulph was directly descended in the Masculine Line of Clodion the sonne of Pharamond the first King of France This Charles was so valiant and generous that he obtained the Surname of Martel for the exceeding great strength of his arme and the memorable Victory which he obtained against the Saracens neare unto the City of Tours of whom he slew in the place to the number of 375. Thousand He reduced the whole Countrey of Languedoc otherwise called Septimany to the Monarchy of France which untill that time was not warranted Hee was very zealous in the defence of the Christian Religion yea and Rome it selfe being distressed by the siege of Luitprand King of the Lombards and brought into great extremities Pope Gregory sent by a Bishop Anastasius and Sergius a Priest the Keyes of the Sepulchre of St. Peter to Prince Martell whereby he intimated unto him that he put himselfe the Church and the City of Rome into his protection and safeguard Wherefore he sent Embassadors to the Lombards to intreate them for his sake to desist and to permit a peace to the City of Rome which tooke such effect that from that time afterward the Popes in all distresses sought to France for reliefe upon all occasions whereof they never were destitute In the end the Goths being vanquished the Saxons and Frizons subdued Languedoc conquered and Provence recovered and France enjoying the tranquillity of a happy peace Charles made a distribution of his estate to his Children and shortly after dyed the ●● of October Anno Domini 741 who was the first that was ever styled Prince of France and lyes at St. Denis in France This Charles Martell being King of France in power though not in Title did make Childeric called Daniel Clot●rius the fourth Theodoric the second and Childerick the third successively Kings of France The Realme an● Crowne of France being by Childeri● the third offered to Charles Martell who refused the Diademe saying That it was more glorious to reigne over kings than to be a King as appeareth by this Epitaph on his Monument 〈◊〉 Brabantinus Dux primus in orbe triumphat ●●●●eus in mundo spe●ialis Christicolarum Dux Dominusque Ducum Regum quoque Rex fore spernit Non vult regnare sed Regibus imperat ipse The Duke of Braban whom Fame doth renowne For the chiefe Champion of all Christendome Ruled both Dukes and Kings and did disdaine To be a King but over Kings did reigne He had foure sonnes Caroloman and Giles of modest milde spirit Pepin and Griffon rough and ambitious he left to Caroloman Austrasia to Giles being more hardy France and Giles given to devotion hee made Bishop of Roan ●nd Griffon being of a turbulent dispo●ion had no portion but was en●orced to depend on his brothers ●hereby the ambition of many bro●ers reigning together was prevented Fame doth report that this Monarchy nor any forraigne State did ever yeeld a worthier man or any one so well accomplisht with so rare and goodly qualities being greatly admired and generally beloved for his pious and renowned actions For Religion Wisdome Justice Valour modesty in prosperity resolution in adversity temperance in Authority diligence and good fortune made him a most compleate Prince not wanting any endowments fit for so high a calling and the example of vertuous perfection for Vertue is the highest perfection
THE Epitome OF All the Lives oF The French King s From PHARAMOND the first to the now Reg ning Lewis the 13 Contaynening all there Chefest actions LONDON Printed by I. Okes and Are to be sould by I Becket at the Inner Templegate An Epitome OF All the Lives of the Kings of France From PHARAMOND the first to the now most Christian King LEVVIS the thirteenth With a Relation of the Famous Battailes of the two Kings of England who were the first victorious Princes that Conquered France Translated out of the French Coppy by R. B. Esq LONDON Printed by I. Okes and are to be sold by Iames Becket at his shop within the Inner Temple Gate 1639. To the Generous Reader the Translator presents his Labours c. Courteous Reader HIstory hath been from all Antiquity as Noble as Notable and as full of Pleasure as Profit Poetry I must confesse to be the elder Sister of the two and the first reducer of Mankinde to Humanity and Civility But what the Elder hath delivered unto us Fabulously the other hath done faithfully Great is the Vtility which redounds to all men by History of what function or quality soever First to Princes it is a modell by which to paterne their Lives and Actions And by reading the Heroicall deeds of others to make their presidents as well by imitating their Vertues as avoyding their Vices To States-men how to establish politicke Lawes and gravely to manage the Affaires of a flourishing Common-Weale It instructs Soveraignes how to governe with Justice mixt with Lenity and Subjects to obey with duty tempered with loyalty Historiographers have in all Times and Ages and amongst all Nations and Languages bin held in great reputation and reverence Amongst the Hebrewes Philo-Judeus and Josephus Bengorion who flourisht in the time of Hierusalems last subversion and depopulation c. Amongst the Grecians Herodotus Thucidides c. Amongst the Romans or Latins Titus Livius Cornelius Tacitus Salust Iustine c. Amongst the French Philip Comines The Author of the French Inventory the Composer of this Epitome of Chronicle c. Of the Scotch Hector Boetius Georgius Buconanus c. And of our English to omit many Holynshed Fabian Speed Mr. Samuel Daniel c. But concerning the present Argument now in agitation I have reade of one Spintherus Tarentinus a man for his knowne VVisedome by the unanimous voyce of Greece adding an Eight to the Seven Sages who when he was to deliver his Opinion of Epaminondas prime Captaine of absolute power and command without limit after he had studied so honour him with his best Expression he uttered of him onely these few Words Hee was a man who knew much and spake little The like I may say of the Author of this present VVorke who sixty foure with their Conditions Natures chiefest Acts and Deaths as also of the severall places of their Jnterment with many of their accute and witty sayings all which noble and Courteous Reader I present unto thee with a Table of all the Kings names at the latter end of the Book and if thou pleasest to accept of my endeavours and but cast a benigne smile and a gentle censure I shall take it a double courtesie and labour to amend what hath beene done amisse But least in commending the Brevity used in his Discourse I might on the contrary erre in the prolixity of my Epistle I ●hi● though abruptly as commit thee so commend thee to thy gentle Interpretation Thine R. B. An Epitome of all the lives of the Kings of France from Pharamond their first to the now Reigning Lewis the 13. Pharamond the first King of France Anno 429. THE French Nation inhabiting the lower Germany long time before the Reigne of the Valentinians Emperours of Rome whether they were Originaries there or Forraigners they according to the report of Aymoynus Ado and other Historians had for an intervall of time ceased to be governed by Kings being contented to be ruled by Dukes untill such time that they had a desire to returne to their manner and custome being incited thereto by the example of other Nations in so much that upon a mature deliberation they concluded their Election upon Pharamond for their King by reason that over and above the vertues resplendent in him he was the last Sonne of their latest Duke Marcomire who was Duke of Franconia or East France whom Stilico had confined as an Exulant in Tuscany from the yeare of our Lord 395. The time of his Election hath not beene precisely recorded by any Historians the Moderne Authors also agree not upon the certainty and number of the yeares of his Reigne For some German Chronicles accompt but 7 others 9 Onuphrius 14 but almost all the French Annalists following Sigebert agree upon 10. or 12. yeares which they begin at the yeare of Grace 419 or 420. The French-men then estated him in the Castle of Dispargun which was according to Gregory in Tongry or Turingia on that side the Rhine where hee made his residence or rather in Germany without an intent of enlarging his command any farther studying onely to institute and found the Kingdome with good policy and the Lawes called Ripu●ry and Salique by reason the French inhabiting for the most part upon the River of Sals which disgorgeth it selfe into the Mein a great and famous River of Germany were called Salians and their principall City Selgestadt which peradventure might seeme to derive its nomination from Salagast who was a chiefe Founder thereof Pharamond lastly comming to the period of his life left the succession to his Son Clodion Anno Domini 430. His Character of life is drawne in these Lineaments he made good Lawes and conformed the French to the obedience of civill government revived the Salique Lawes and was the Founder of the French Monarchy his Name Waramond or Pharamond imported a true mouth Truth being a noble vertue in a Prince The Church was then happy in those Lights of Religion Jerome Chrysostome Ambrose and Augustine shining through the Clouds of Oppression wherewith those times were darkned and obscured And the Papacy was then but weake in power afterward growing strong by the Emperor● absence warring against the Barbar●ans and by succouring afflicted Christians Cloion or Clodion the second King of France Anno 432. CLoion or Clodion according to Sidonius Apollinaris and Gregory of Tours succeeded his Father Pharamond in the Regall estate in the yeare 432. of our Redemption He was surnamed the Hairy because hee commanded the French men to weare long haire in token of Liberty to the end they might be knowne and distinguished from Romans or as some Moderne Writers will have it to this end that none should weare long haire but those of the Royall blood In the beginning of his Reigne perceiving the Romans to bee employed altogether against the Vandals in Africke and a notable dissention betweene Aetius and Boniface went from his Castle of Difpargun● and fastened upon Cambray and
all that Countrey which lyes betweene the Rivers of Escaut and the Somme where to this day are the Cities of Monts Valenciennes Cambray and the Forrest heretofore nominated * ●ale●●st in ●nge Carbonaire Afterwards having made a great discomfiture of the Romans who made head against him hee came as farre as the Bourough of St. Helens which is in the Land of Artois He also subjugated those of Thuringia the Saxons and other populations of Almaine as Funecius is of opinion Others also adde that the City of Mayence was by him taken in The Hunnibalt of Trithemius holds that he divided his Kingdome into two parts nominating that upon the Coast of the Rhine Austrasie and the part upon the West Neustria or Westria The Chronicles of Flanders say that he led his Army against those of Therovenne otherwise called Morinians whom he made subjects they perceiving their Auxiliars the Cinabres and Ruthenians and their Captaine Generall Gondmar overthrowne who had a Daughter whom this Clodion caused to be married to a Nephew of his who was called Flandebert from whom they will have the Countrey of Flanders to derive its first Nomination although it is more evident that it was not so called before the time of Charlemaigne He deceased in the 20. yeare of his Reigne Anno Domini 450 according to Ado and Aymoinus leaving as Jaques Meier and Richard of Wassebourgh doe relate Ranchaine or Ranachaire and Alberic alias Auberon his sonnes Wearing of long haire as was said was ordained by this King to bee the Ornament of Princes whereby Clodamire slaine in Battaile was knowne from the vulgar Souldiers and shaving off the Haire was a Ceremony used at degrading of Kings and Queene Clotilde suffered her Sonnes Heads to be cut off rather than their Haire preferring honour to life and accounting the disgrace which her Children should receive by shaving making them incapable of the Royall dignity worse than death for Life after the decease of honour is but a continuall lingring death Hippone was now besieged by Genserick King of the Vandals Saint Augustine being 76. yeeres old having seene and suffered in the miseries of the Church then generally afflicted by the Barbarians wearied with being a Spectator of those Tragedies withdrew to Heaven and dyed leaving the Christian World a mourner for his departure Merovaeus the third King of France Anno Domini 450. MErovaeus Maire of the Palace of Clodion according to Jaques Meier and Richard of Wassebourgh the Authors afore-said which Merovaeus neverthelesse the Abbot of Vrsperg thinkes and other French Historians are of opinion to have beene a Bastard-sonne or a neare Kinsman of Clodion was by the reason of his valour and experience in Warre chosen King of the French Anno Domini 450. secluding the Sonnes of Clodion from the inheritance of the Kingdome Many are of opinion that he was the first that tooke upon him to March boldly all over the Countries of the Gaules because by force of Armes hee opened the way into those parts where none of his predecessors had had any peaceable habitation or abode And for this cause hee being acknowledged by the Ancient French to be the first King to have passed so farre the Gauls or Frenchmen were called Merovinians Others are of opinion that it was for that he was the first of the Line that reigned over the French untill Pepin it being that the sonnes of Clodion were supplanted who betooke themselves for assistance to their Mother in the Kingdome of Thuringia where being growne to age by the ayde of other Nations recovered Almany Cambresis Tournay Henault and Couloine of which parts they tearmed themselves Kings and maintained it against the Merovinians untill the time of Glovis In the meane time Attilla King of the Hunnes having spoiled a great part of Europe laboured to joyne with the Visigoths and French to ruine the Romans which was a cause that Aetius a Roman Gentleman who had the command of all the Roman forces of the West had this Warre in charge who gave unto Merovaeus the right wing of the Battaile against Attila who lost the field This Battaile was fought in the Catalaunicke Plaine which some esteeme to have beene that at Chaalons in Champaigne others at Solongne by Orleans who seeme better of opinion than those who would have it neare Tholouse because it is certaine that Attilae never penetrated so farre into the Countrey of the Visigoths where the Shock was so bloody and cruell that there remained one hundred and fourescore thousand men slaine in the place Merovaeus yeelded to Fate in the tenth yeare of his Reigne according to Sigebert and other Historians Anno Domini 459. This King was fortunate in his Warres for after the Death of Aetia executed by the Emperour Valentinians command being so faithfull a servant that it was said that the Emperour had cut off his right hand with his left by valour potency and opportunity hee advanced the Monarchy of France growing more exact and compleate in strength hee being the third Stone in that Royall building called Gaule which new-begun Estate was raised to a greater perfection by many other Royall Builders descended from his Race and called Merovingieres in memory of this Merovee who as Titus Vespasian said Non perdidi diem so hee accounted that Day lost wherein hee did no good This worthy King was much lamented of all men they gave him the solemne rites at his funerall which appertained to a King in those dayes which was teares and sorrow for forty dayes after The Church was now much troubled by the Nestorian and Eutichean Heresies which weeds were by two Councells assembled at Ephesus and Chalcedon plucked up out of the Garden of Christendome and the true Christian Religion was now defended by Cyrillus and Theoderet two stout Champions for the Church who imployed their whole strength and power for the maintenance thereof so that the remembrance of their pious and noble actions will continue in all ages to their eternall praise and commendation Chilperic or Hilperic the fourth King of France Anno 459. CHilperic succeeded in the Kingdome by the favour of the memory of his Father Anno Domini 459. notwithstanding that he seemed borne fitter to lead an Army than governe a Kingdome in Justice and peace by reason of his insolence and lubricity for which the great and powerfull men of his Kingdome enforced him having already reigned three yeeres to flye into the Kingdome of Thuringia there to expect the issue of his fortune But before his departure his friend Vidomare or as others report Guiemans gave him his word and promise breaking a peece of Gold betweene them the King keeping the one halfe and he the other advising the King that hee should boldly returne when he should receive the other halfe from him Hereupon the French chose in his place Gilles or Gillon Governour of So●issons under the Romans who reigned as King 8. yeares in the end whereof Chilperic was re-appealed